PoliticalGraveyard.com
The Political Graveyard: A Database of American History
Deming family of Maryland and New York

Note: This is just one of 1,130 family groupings listed on The Political Graveyard web site. These families each have three or more politician members, all linked together by blood, marriage or adoption.

This specific family group is a subset of the much larger Three Thousand Related Politicians group. An individual may be listed with more than one subset.

These groupings — even the names of the groupings, and the areas of main activity — are the result of a computer algorithm working with the data I have, not the choices of any historian or genealogist.

Horace Mann Horace Mann (1796-1859) — also known as "The Father of American Public Education" — of Dedham, Norfolk County, Mass.; Boston, Suffolk County, Mass. Born in Franklin, Norfolk County, Mass., May 4, 1796. Lawyer; member of Massachusetts state house of representatives, 1827-33; member of Massachusetts state senate, 1833-37; secretary, Massachusetts Board of Education, 1837-48; founder and editor of The Common School Journal; became a national leader in improving and reforming public schools; U.S. Representative from Massachusetts 8th District, 1848-53; Free Soil candidate for Governor of Massachusetts, 1852; president and professor at Antioch College, 1852-59. Elected to the Hall of Fame for Great Americans in 1900. Died in Yellow Springs, Greene County, Ohio, August 2, 1859 (age 63 years, 90 days). Original interment somewhere in Yellow Springs, Ohio; reinterment at North Burial Ground, Providence, R.I.; statue at State House Grounds, Boston, Mass.
  Relatives: Married 1830 to Charlotte Messer (1809-1832); married, May 1, 1843, to Mary Tyler Peabody (1806-1887; sister-in-law of Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864)).
  Political families: Roosevelt family; Deming family of Maryland and New York (subsets of the Three Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — Wikipedia article — NNDB dossier — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Image source: U.S. postage stamp (1940)
  Daniel Putnam Tyler (1798-1875) — also known as Daniel P. Tyler — of Brooklyn, Windham County, Conn. Born in Brooklyn, Windham County, Conn., July 17, 1798. Lawyer; member of Connecticut state house of representatives from Brooklyn, 1838; secretary of state of Connecticut, 1844-46; delegate to Republican National Convention from Connecticut, 1856. Died in Brooklyn, Windham County, Conn., November 6, 1875 (age 77 years, 112 days). Interment at South Cemetery, Brooklyn, Conn.
  Relatives: Son of Mary (Baker) Tyler and Pascal Paoli Tyler (1774-1847); married, June 9, 1837, to Emily Cecilia Tyler (1811-1869); first cousin once removed of Edith Kermit Carow (1861-1948; who married Theodore Roosevelt); first cousin twice removed of Theodore Roosevelt, Jr.; third cousin once removed of William Crowninshield Endicott (1826-1900); fourth cousin once removed of John Adams Dix, Nathaniel Hawthorne and Chauncey C. Pendleton.
  Political families: Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams family of Connecticut and New York; Roosevelt family; Crowninshield-Adams family of Savannah, Georgia (subsets of the Three Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
Nathaniel Hawthorne Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864) — also known as Nathaniel Hathorne — of Concord, Middlesex County, Mass. Born in Salem, Essex County, Mass., July 4, 1804. Famed novelist and short story writer; U.S. Surveyor of Customs, 1846-49; U.S. Consul in Liverpool, 1853-57. English ancestry. Died in Plymouth, Grafton County, N.H., May 19, 1864 (age 59 years, 320 days). Interment at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord, Mass.; statue at Hawthorne Boulevard, Salem, Mass.
  Relatives: Son of Nathaniel Hathorne (1775-1808) and Elizabeth Clarke (Manning) Hathorne (1780-1849); married, July 9, 1842, to Sophia Amelia Peabody (1809-1871; sister-in-law of Horace Mann); great-grandfather of Olcott Hawthorne Deming; second great-grandfather of Rust Macpherson Deming; fourth cousin once removed of Daniel Putnam Tyler (1798-1875).
  Political families: Pendleton family of Connecticut; Roosevelt family of New York City, New York; Roosevelt family; Hoar-Sherman family of Massachusetts; Deming family of Maryland and New York; Crowninshield-Adams family of Savannah, Georgia (subsets of the Three Thousand Related Politicians).
  The borough of Hawthorne, New Jersey, is named for him.
  See also Wikipedia article — NNDB dossier
  Fiction by Nathaniel Hawthorne: The House of Seven Gables — The Scarlet Letter — Selected Short Stories of Nathaniel Hawthorne
  Books about Nathaniel Hawthorne: Brenda Wineapple, Hawthorne : A Life — Luther S. Luedtke, Nathaniel Hawthorne and the Romance of the Orient — Raymona E. Hull, Nathaniel Hawthorne, the English Experience, 1853-1864
  Image source: Project Gutenberg
  Olcott Hawthorne Deming (1909-2007) — also known as Olcott H. Deming — Born in Westchester County, N.Y., February 28, 1909. U.S. Consul in Bangkok, 1948-51; Tokyo, 1951-54; U.S. Consul General in Okinawa, 1957-59; Kampala, 1961-63; U.S. Ambassador to Uganda, 1963-66. Died, of septicemia, at a hospice in Washington, D.C., March 20, 2007 (age 98 years, 20 days). Burial location unknown.
  Relatives: Son of William Champion Deming and Imogen (Hawthorne) Deming; married to Louise Macpherson (died 1976); father of Rust Macpherson Deming; great-grandson of Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864).
  Political families: Roosevelt family; Deming family of Maryland and New York (subsets of the Three Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Wikipedia article — U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB dossier — OurCampaigns candidate detail
  Rust Macpherson Deming (b. 1941) — also known as Rust M. Deming — of Bethesda, Montgomery County, Md. Born in 1941. Foreign Service officer; U.S. Ambassador to Tunisia, 2000-03. Member, Council on Foreign Relations. Still living as of 2007.
  Relatives: Son of Olcott Hawthorne Deming (1909-2007) and Louise Macpherson Deming; second great-grandson of Nathaniel Hawthorne.
  Political family: Deming family of Maryland and New York (subset of the Three Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB dossier
"Enjoy the hospitable entertainment of a political graveyard."
Henry L. Clinton, Apollo Hall, New York City, February 3, 1872
The Political Graveyard

The Political Graveyard is a web site about U.S. political history and cemeteries. Founded in 1996, it is the Internet's most comprehensive free source for American political biography, listing 312,576 politicians, living and dead.
  The listings are incomplete; development of the database is a continually ongoing project.  
  Information on this page — and on all other pages of this site — is believed to be accurate, but is not guaranteed. Users are advised to check with other sources before relying on any information here.  
  The official URL for this page is: https://politicalgraveyard.com/families/10001-0813.html.  
  Links to this or any other Political Graveyard page are welcome, but specific page addresses may sometimes change as the site develops.  
  If you are searching for a specific named individual, try the alphabetical index of politicians.  
  More information: FAQ; privacy policy; cemetery links.  
  If you find any error or omission in The Political Graveyard, or if you have information to share, please see the biographical checklist and submission guidelines.  
Copyright notices: (1) Facts are not subject to copyright; see Feist v. Rural Telephone. (2) Politician portraits displayed on this site are 70-pixel-wide monochrome thumbnail images, which I believe to constitute fair use under applicable copyright law. Where possible, each image is linked to its online source. However, requests from owners of copyrighted images to delete them from this site are honored. (3) Original material, programming, selection and arrangement are © 1996-2019 Lawrence Kestenbaum. (4) This work is also licensed for free non-commercial re-use, with attribution, under a Creative Commons License.
Site information: The Political Graveyard is created and maintained by Lawrence Kestenbaum, who is solely responsible for its structure and content. — The mailing address is The Political Graveyard, P.O. Box 2563, Ann Arbor MI 48106. — This site is hosted by HDL. — The Political Graveyard opened on July 1, 1996; the last full revision was done on March 10, 2021.

Creative 
Commons License Follow polgraveyard on Twitter [Amazon.com]